When it comes to injection molds, the importance of an efficient cooling system cannot be overemphasized. A reduction of just one or two seconds in cooling time can lead to as much as a 10- to 20-percent increase in the production rate. That alone could directly affect the profitability of the job. However, saving time is not the only benefit of a cooling system.
Controlled cooling of the entire plastic part is vital to the preservation of its dimensional stability and mechanical properties. Properly cooled parts are less likely to warp, get stressed or be brittle. It is easy to see why a well-designed cooling system is a key component of a well-designed injection mold, leading to the profitable production of high-quality parts. Here are some tips to help you design an effective mold cooling system, while reducing design time and effort:
Decide on the most critical components to cool. In most tools with inserted cavities, the cavity blocks and slides are the only components in the tool that require cooling lines. While the surrounding plates will get hot, adding cooling into them will not contribute much towards the ultimate goal of removing heat from the plastic part.
In molds with individual cavity blocks, the cooling design typically can be viewed as a circuit. It will have an inlet and an outlet, and will trace a path through the block. The circuit should be close enough to the part to effectively remove the heat, but not so close as to risk drilling holes into any of the mold features.
Make smart material choices. Items like core pins and lifters are often too small to get any effective cooling inside them. If you are concerned about removing heat from small inserts, you may want to use material with a high rate of thermal conductivity for these components. Aluminum and bronze alloys have much higher thermal transfer rates than steel and can be very useful for pulling the heat out of the plastic and towards the cooling circuits.
Create an effective water circuit. Creating a water circuit with a thorough path around the part is the most important consideration for cooling effectiveness. Bending the circuit around the part contributes to a turbulent water flow, which helps to pull the most heat from the steel. At the same time, be careful not to make the circuit too long and complex, which would cause the water temperature to rise to the point that it diminishes the cooling effect. Generally speaking, you want to keep the water temperature no higher than 2-3°C above the entry-point temperature.
Speed up design using catalog parts. Once the circuit is designed, get the plugs and other water components in place. Using standard components from 3D catalogs can save you as much as 80 percent in design time. All you need to do is pick the part and drop it into your design.
Adjust your strategy when dealing with large parts. A different type of strategy often is applied to cooling very large parts or typical automotive tools where left- and right-hand parts are both required. With large core plates that measure 6 feet or even longer, a cooling system made of long winding circuits will not be effective in pulling the heat out of so much plastic. Instead, molds of this type are usually designed with straight-through channels. Each channel is a circuit unto itself and can be drilled to a depth that comes very close to the part, often with baffles that serve to direct the water up into the higher portion of the mold.
Ease the design of baffles and bubblers. To increase cooling efficiency, baffles and bubblers should be custom-fit to each area. Yet, custom-fitting hundreds of baffles and bubblers can drain a lot of design time.
A system that allows for automated selection of baffle and bubbler length and adds these directly to the bill of materials can cut the time spent on this task from hours to minutes.
Use built-in analysis. Even the best designer can occasionally make a mistake. Look for a system that can analyze the completeness of a water circuit. Simulating the water flow provides an added measure of assurance that your cooling system will work as intended.
Simulate plastic fill. Take it a step further by simulating the plastic fill with molding analysis. This is a sophisticated process that will animate the plastic flow through the part and highlight problem areas such as air traps and weld lines. On top of that, it can analyze the cooling channel design and predict the temperature of the plastic part throughout the molding process. Running a simulation can identify numerous potential cooling issues, such as hot spots on the part, long cooling times or even warping.
Use CAD software built for moldmaking with specific cooling functions. A smart CAD system can automate many of the tasks involved in the creation of the cooling circuits, greatly reducing the time spent and the potential for human error. Recognizing that the lines are designed for water, the software will automatically attach intelligent rules to catalog parts. For example, it recognizes that a 1/4-NPT plug is appropriate for a 7/16-drilled line, so these components automatically fall into place for any channel selected.
In addition, software that automatically cuts any required pocket or thread when a catalog component is added to the design will significantly minimize repetitive tasks.
Consider conformal cooling. Many injection molders have already discovered the advantages of conformal cooling. Transcending the limitations of straight-line designs, conformal cooling channels closely follow the shape of the cavity and core to better reach hot spots and promote temperature uniformity. To make conformal cooling part of your shop’s repertoire, you need access to 3D printing, as well as a CAD system that can design and analyze circuits that are more than a series of straight lines.
how to consider to dasign injection mold cooling system:
1) Influence of Mold Temperature on Different Plastics
For plastic materials with great fluidity (PE, PP, HIPS, and ABS, etc.), lowering the mold temperature helps reduce stress cracking (the mold temperature is usually around 60°C);
For plastic materials with poor fluidity (PC, PPO and PSF, etc.), raising the mold temperature helps reduce the internal stress of the plastic product (the mold temperature usually ranges between 80°C and 120°C).
Influence of mold temperature on quality of molded plastic products
Temperature too high: The plastic products deform greatly after mold release, and it is easy to cause flashing and sticking;
Temperature too low: Leading to poor melt fluidity, as well as such surface defects as silver streaks, flow lines, and underfilling;
Uneven temperature: The plastic products shrink unevenly, resulting in warping deformation.
2) Mold temperature directly affects the injection cycle
Injection mold cooling time takes up about 80% of the injection cycle.
injection mold cooling line
Ways to improve mold temperature control
Appropriate size of cooling lines: diameter 5-13mm (3/16″-1/2″).
Select mold materials with high thermal conductivity.
Reasonable plastic product design.
Proper cooling circuit.
Enhance the cooling of the thick areas of a plastic product.
Fast and slow cooling.
Strictly control the temperature difference between the coolant outlet and inlet.
3) Key considerations for injection mold cooling channel design
1.Which is more important, cooling or ejection?
2.Try to keep the thermal balance of the mold, so that the temperature is uniform in each part of the mold.
3.A parallel cooling channel is not preferred
In every minute of cycle time, cooling consumes the vast majority of clock-ticks. That makes it an important factor in determining
the profitability of a part. Mold and part designers understand the implications, relying on some combination of expertise, experience, intuition, prototyping and CAE analysis to develop trusted cooling system designs.
This approach helps practicing engineers maximize productivity.
In other words, when you create a cooling system that works well and performs reliably for your application, you can spend more time designing high-quality molds as quickly as possible.
But pressures to reduce cycle time and increase cost-efficiency
are growing more intense by the day. If you can find new ways to shorten cycle time or minimize piece part cost — without sacrificing your quality standards — it’s a clear opportunity to build valuable competitive advantage.
The design of the cooling system is often limited by the geometry of the cavity, the parting surface, the slider and the ejector pin, so the design guidelines for the ideal distribution cannot be given rigidly.
The goal of the mold designer should be to take all the aspects into consideration, and design a proper cooling system that will:
Evenly cool the molded product
Reduce the molding cycle time
This leaves us with three relatively simple tasks to quantify the energy flow and estimate cooling requirements, assuming a traditional water-circulation cooling system:
1. Understand the thermal properties of polymers and learn the method for calculating energy values and flow for both amorphous and semi-crystalline materials.
2. Calculate the (cooling) energy that must be removed from the molded parts to change the temperature from the processing (melt) temperature to a safe ejection temperature.
3. Using the cooling energy requirement as a starting place, determine the diameter and length of cooling circuits, the coolant ∆T value, and the coolant flow rate required to be turbulent and to remove the required amount of heat (energy).
actually sometimes it is very difficult to decide how to design a perfect cooling in this mold because of certain product structure
this is a good blog, also that is not easy to do it well
frankly as a mold designer, this is my goal in mold design:-)
Obviously you give us a good guide on this issue
do you have any perfect cooling system design sample? could you sharing it? thanks!
Hi of course we have, but we can not share it here, because Design involves our customers’ business secret,If you have any actual problems on this issue, welcome to contact us
maybe this is just a guide, because in every real mold design, mould designer will meet all kind of issue. I mean it is not easy
as a mold designer,I can give you a thumb up, thanks for sharing
thank you so much for writing an article like this, actually designing a perfect cooling system for a mold is my mold design goal
Great blog here! I think you have rich experience in mold design
your experience about this issue is very helpful, thanks for sharing
actually sometimes it is hard to make your decision in mold design
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